materialise
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materialise
Past participle: materialised
Gerund: materialising
Imperative |
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materialise |
materialise |
Collins English Verb Tables © HarperCollins Publishers 2011
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Verb | 1. | materialise - come into being; become reality; "Her dream really materialized" hap, happen, occur, come about, take place, go on, pass off, fall out, pass - come to pass; "What is happening?"; "The meeting took place off without an incidence"; "Nothing occurred that seemed important" come out, appear - be issued or published; "Did your latest book appear yet?"; "The new Woody Allen film hasn't come out yet" dematerialise, dematerialize - become immaterial; disappear |
Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
Translations
يَتَجَسَّديَتَحَقَّق
líkamnast, holdgastverîa aî veruleika
material
(məˈtiəriəl) noun1. anything out of which something is, or may be, made. Tables are usually made from solid material such as wood.
2. cloth. I'd like three metres of blue woollen material.
adjective1. consisting of solid(s), liquid(s), gas(es) or any combination of these. the material world.
2. belonging to the world; not spiritual. He wanted material things like money, possessions and power.
3. essential or important. evidence that is material to his defence.
maˈterially adverb to a great or important extent. Circumstances have changed materially.
maˈterialize, maˈterialise verb1. to take solid or bodily form. The figure materialized as we watched with astonishment.
2. (of something expected or hoped for) to happen. I don't think her plans will materialize.
maˌterialiˈzation, maˌterialiˈsation nounKernerman English Multilingual Dictionary © 2006-2013 K Dictionaries Ltd.